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DIESEL RECON CANADA

CARDINAL-Canada

Company Name:
Corporate Name:
DIESEL RECON CANADA
Company Title:  
Company Description:  
Keywords to Search:  
Company Address: ,CARDINAL,ON,Canada 
ZIP Code:
Postal Code:
K0E1E0 
Telephone Number: 6136573488 
Fax Number: 2502963609 
Website:
 
Email:
 
USA SIC Code(Standard Industrial Classification Code):
5084-14 
USA SIC Description:
Engines-Diesel (Wholesale) 
Number of Employees:
1 to 4 
Sales Amount:
$2.5 to 5 million 
Credit History:
Credit Report:
Unknown 
Contact Person:
 
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Company News:
  • Are names of chemicals not proper nouns? - English Language Usage . . .
    Product names which are derived after an inventor's name will often remain capitalized, though not always (e g the petroleum distillate used to power trucks and locomotives is called "diesel" rather than "Diesel" even though it's named after the inventor of the four-stroke compression-ignition engine for which that fuel was formulated)
  • Same adjective for two nouns - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The government placed restrictions on both diesel fuel and diesel engines Here I dont want to repeat the diesel I cannot write: The government placed restrictions on both diesel fuel and engines
  • Origin of the phrase Now were cooking with
    The original is "Now You're Cooking With Gas", supposedly part of an ad campaign from the era when gas stoves first started replacing wood stoves for cooking in the home The Wikitionary entry cooking with gas offers some insight, but I couldn't locate a specific ad campaign, or any other corroborating materials This article suggests that this would have been early in the 1900s
  • Origin of the phrase, Theres more than one way to skin a cat.
    There are many versions of this proverb, which suggests there are always several ways to do something The earliest printed citation of this proverbial saying that I can find is in a short story by the American humorist Seba Smith - The Money Diggers, 1840: "There are more ways than one to skin a cat," so are there more ways than one of digging for money Charles Kingsley used one old British
  • Difference between accident and coincidence [closed]
    In many dictionaries there doesn't seem to be a difference between those two words (if they express that something unexpected happens), but my English teacher told me that coincidence is rather used than accident However, Vin Diesel used it and that's why I was still uncertain, mostly about when to use accident and when coincidence
  • Particulate vs. particle [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    What’s the difference between particulate and particle? Should it be diesel particulates or diesel particles, and why? Could you provide three or more examples where it should use particulate rat
  • What is the origin of sucker and it sucks?
    etymonline has for suck: O E sucan, from PIE root sug- suk- of imitative origin Meaning “do fellatio” is first recorded 1928 Slang sense of “be contemptible” first attested 1971 (the underlying notion is of fellatio) and sucker: “young mammal before it is weaned”, late 14c , agent noun from suck Slang meaning “person who is easily deceived” is first attested 1836, in
  • Throttle is to slow down, but full throttle is max speed?
    In these cases, it is used even when the engine being controlled is a diesel or a gas turbine, where control is effected by altering the fuel flow rather than that of the working fluid, and it is also sometimes used where the device being controlled is an electric motor
  • What is the difference between a dieresis and an umlaut?
    This is implied by the second quote, but one thing you could add is if one wants to make an educated guess at whether one is looking at a dieresis or an umlaut, one should look if the diacritic is placed over a vowel that is preceded by another vowel, in which case it is more likely a dieresis If the vowel in question is preceded by a consonant, then almost certainly an umlaut, since it
  • meaning - Flammable versus Combustible - English Language Usage . . .
    Gas is flammable, diesel vapour combustible In England I was always taught that the difference between flammable and inflammable was that inflammable required a flame to permit burning




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